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  2. DV (video format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DV_(video_format)

    All DV cassettes use 1 ⁄ 4 inch (6.4 mm) wide tape. DV on magnetic tape uses helical scan, which wraps the tape around a tilted, rotating head drum with video heads mounted to it. As the drum rotates, the heads read the tape diagonally. DV, DVCAM and DVCPRO use a 21.7 mm diameter head drum at 9000 rpm. The diagonal video tracks read by the ...

  3. Famicom Data Recorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famicom_Data_Recorder

    Famicom Data Recorder (HVC-008) is a compact cassette tape data interface introduced in 1984, for the Famicom which had been introduced in 1983. It is compatible with four Famicom games, for saving user-generated content to tapes. As Nintendo's first rewritable storage medium, it was succeeded by the Famicom Disk System in 1986.

  4. Commodore 64 disk and tape emulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodore_64_disk_and_tape...

    Tape connector adapters. The C2N232 adapter is a RS-232 interface that can be plugged to the cassette port of an 8-bit Commodore computer and supports emulation of the tape deck. The C2N232 hardware was designed in 2001–2003 by Marko Mäkelä. It is freely available as open source, and a few hundred were built and sold. [17]

  5. Digital8 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital8

    The cassettes are not interchangeable, and there is no adapter from one format to another. Digital8 machines run tape at 29 mm per second, faster than baseline DV (19 mm/s) and comparable to professional DV formats like DVCAM (28 mm/s) and DVCPRO (34 mm/s). A 120-minute 8-mm cassette holds 106 m of tape and can store 60 minutes of digital video ...

  6. Camcorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camcorder

    Sony Handycam DCR-IP7BT MICROMV camcorder and Sony MICROMV tape (top), compared with MiniDV and Hi8 tapes. DV (1995): Initially developed by Sony, the DV standard became the most widespread standard-definition digital camcorder technology for the next decade. [citation needed] Users could connect their DV camcorders to their computers, using 4 ...

  7. 8 mm video format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8_mm_video_format

    Sony has licensed Digital8 technology to at least one other firm (Hitachi), which marketed a few models for a while; but by 2005 only Sony sold Digital8 consumer equipment. Digital8's main rival is the consumer MiniDV format, which uses narrower tape and a correspondingly smaller cassette shell.